Votes at a glance: multiple bills passed on Oklahoma House floor (incl. Service Oklahoma, eminent domain updates, AI companion restrictions)

Oklahoma House of Representatives · March 25, 2026

Get AI-powered insights, summaries, and transcripts

Sign Up Free
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

The Oklahoma House advanced and passed a slate of bills during the floor session, including House Bill 30-15 (Service Oklahoma electronic credentials), House Bill 34-53 (eminent domain burden-of-proof change), and technology/AI-related measures; vote tallies ranged from unanimous to wide majorities.

The Oklahoma House of Representatives moved and passed multiple bills on the floor during the session, taking recorded roll-call votes on a range of measures from administrative updates to policy changes in environment, torts and technology.

Notable outcomes included:

- House Bill 30-15 (Service Oklahoma): Sponsor Representative Curbs said the bill authorizes Service Oklahoma to issue and manage electronic credentials. The House passed the bill by a recorded vote, 73 aye, 22 nay.

- House Bill 34-72 (environment and natural resources): Representative Curbs explained technical updates; the House passed the bill by recorded vote, 92 aye, 2 nay.

- House Bill 34-53 (eminent domain): Representative Stairs described amended language that shifts the burden of proof in condemnation litigation to the condemning authority; members debated utilities carveouts and agency support. The House passed the amended bill by recorded vote, 91 aye, 4 nay.

- House Bill 41-28 (Game and Fish): Representative Fett Gatter presented a floor substitute and harvest-limit carveouts for select counties; the House passed the bill, recorded as 64 aye, 30 nay.

- House Bill 41-26 (torts — liability for motocross parks): Passed by recorded vote, 91 aye, 5 nay.

- Technology and AI-related measure (House Bill 35-44): Representative Maynard led an amendment focusing the bill on social AI companions designed to simulate emotional human relationships and to prevent minor interactions; the House recorded a wide majority (96 aye, 0 nay) in favor.

- House Joint Resolution HJR10-69 (constitutional boundary cleanups): Leader Lawson explained updates to constitutional language on county boundaries and seats; the House passed the resolution by recorded vote, 78 aye, 14 nay.

Many of the bills were advanced with floor amendments or substitutes that sponsors said came from stakeholder conversations; roll calls and recorded tallies were announced by the clerk for each final passage. Where floor debate occurred, members raised questions about carveouts, local impacts, funding links and implementation mechanisms.